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GRAIN BINDERS
We have only three' Binders left for this season.
If you intend buying one this season play safe
and see us promptly.
We feel sure that we can sell you one cheaper
this year than price will be next season.
We have Binder Twine and Mowing Machines
ready for delivery.
B. II. ANDREW ft SON,
Reduced Round Trip Fares
for
Summer Travel
TYBEE “Where Ocean Breezes Blow” and other attrac
tive South Atlantic Seaside Resorts.
New York, Boston, Baltimore and Philadelphia and
resorts in the East via Savannah and steam
ship going and returning same route; or
going one route, returning another.
Lake and Mountain Resorts in the Carolinas, Virginia,
Tennessee and Kentucky.
Resorts in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota.
Denver, Estes Park, Colorado Springs, Manitou, Mesa
Verde National Park, Pueblo and other re
sorts in Colorado.
Yellowstone National Park in Montana and Wyoming.
Glacier National Park in Montana. Grand
Canyon, Arizona.
\ <i r ; r] .
San Francisco, Los Angeles, Long Beach, San Diego, Santa
Barbara, California; Portland, Oregon;
Seattle, Spokane and Tacoma, Washington;
Vancouver and Victoria, B'. C., Lake Louise
and Banff, Alta.
St. Johns, New Brunswick; Halifax, Nova Scotia; Toronto,
Ottawa and Muskoke Lake, Ont.; Montreal,
Murray Bay and Quebec, Que., and other
resorts in Canada.
Resorts in New York, Massachusetts, Maine, New
Hampshire, Vermont, New Jersey, and
Rhode Island. .
Total fares, schedules, routes, service, sleeping and parlor car
accommodations and any. other information or assistance
you may desire will be cheerfully .and promptly supplied
by Passenger and Ticket Agents.
Central of Georgia Railway
The Right Way
F. J. ROBINSON, General Passenger Agent, Savannah, Ga.
— f i ' —-
IS THE TIME
TO PAY
Subscribe for The HOME JOURNAL
After Every Meal
J
Clacw your food
well t then use
WEtlGILEY’S to
aid digestion.
13 also keeps
tlie teeth clean*
hreath sweet*
appetite keen.
The Croat American
Sweetmeat
PETITION TO REGISTER LAND
Georgia, Houston County.
In the Superior Court of said countyt
To whom it may concern.
Take notice that Ned Thomas Feagin
has ^led in said court a petition seeking
to register th« following lands under the
provisions of the Land Registration Act--,
to wit:
All of lots Number two hundred fo’ ty
(240) two hundred forty-five (241). and
two hundred fifty-eight (258), in lower
fifth distriot of Houston County Georgia
enob of said lots containing two hundred
two and one-half (202)4) acres, more or
loss; the entire tract ront-iining six hun
dred seven and one-half [207)4] acres,
moiertrlesH, said lots adjoining one
another and having been k«own as part
of the HOme place Of Henry S. Feugiu
dnring his lifetime.
YOu arc warned to shOw cause to the
contrary, if any yOu have, before said
COurt On the 3rd day Of July 1993. This
23nd day Of May, 1923.
h L Wasden,. clerk.
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Notice is hereby given that all parties
failing to make returns of their 1923 taxes
to the tax assessors by the 15th of June
will be doubledtaxed. The penalty will
not be removed except for str'et legal
excuse.
After this year all tax returns must be
made to the tax receiver within the time
allowed by law. By order of the Board of
County Commissioners. This 15th day
of May, 1923.
0. E. Brunson, Clerk..
—F O R SAT, E—Cabbage and
Collard plants 15c per hundred.
8 F Dasher, perry Oa.
W. A. STROTHER.
- INSURANCE -
Prhry. Gnoaau.
E. HOLTZCLAW
FIRE INSURANCE AGENT
Insurance On Farm Property
A'l Specialty
PERRY, GA.
FARM FOR SALE.
The G. E. Rape place a
valuable plantation one mile
of Centerville, 50 acres of
bearing peach trees, well
improved. Easy terms.
A. A. Smoak, Perry, Ga.
CREDIT DEMAND EXPANDING
Available Supplies Of Labor Fix Limit
Attained By Aggregate National
Produotlon
Washington.—The “federal reserve
hoard, In a formal statement, again
jcalled attention to the rapid expansion
.of credit demand and industrial pro
duction and warns that “a continuance
of this credit demand must soon result
In Increased borrowing by banks which
,are members of the federal reserve
.system of the federal reserve banks.”
iWhile the statement was Issued as a
summary of April business, it debts
exclusively with the credit and pro
duction situation and threads through
It a comparison with conditions In
1920.
In Its discussion o£ the expanding
production, the board declares “sub
stantial” increase in the demand for
currency is in prospect if the rapid
growth of» payroll 1 amounts continues
as it has since the middle 1 of 1922.
Should more currency be needed, the
board adds, the banks will seek great,
or accommodation from the reservo
banks to secure the additional cur
rency issued.
"The present lending capacity of the
country’s banking system, in view of
the great growth of the reserves at
the reserve banks,” the statement says,
"is now far in excess of the credit
needs of the country’s productive ca
pacity. In such a situation it is the
available suppplies of labor and equip-
mnet and not thei potential supply of
credit that in the end must fix the
limit which may be attained by aggre
gate national production. As these
limits are approached, credit policy
must he increasingly influencad by
careful consideration of the continued
efffectiveness of further additions to
the total volume of credit in contribut
ing to increased productivity.’*
The board, however, directs atten
tion to' the difference in the increases
in commercial loans by commercial
banking houses and the earning assets
of the federal reserve banks as sug
gesting that the overflow of credit de
mand adds, that the increased credit
demand has been largely in response
to the Increased volume of production.
At the same time, the board quotes-
from the report of the Hoover com
mittee on unemployment and business
cycles to the effect that the rapid ex
pansion of bank credit often lifts the
buying power of business men out of
line with the general buying power of
the community.
Body Of N. Y. Child Found Mutilated
New York.—After hundreds had
searched for her all night the body of
pretty little Josephine Bruno, 8, was
found In the cellar of a house across
a courtyard from her own home near
(lie Brooklyn water front. Twice dtir-,
IPS the preceding night- this callal* had
bPen searched without discovering a
trace of the crime. EoIIcb-believe that,
the pervert who killed the girl brought
her body back home at dawn. The lit
tle girl had been slabbed lb the neck
n«d badly mutilated. The crime cul-
niiMated a series of offenses against
children in ihe waterfront district that
houses Brooklyn’s Itpljan colony.
Vienne Drowning Sorrows In Drink
Vienna, Austria,—Discouraged in
their struggle for existence on low
wages, paid in the practically worth
less crown, Vienna men and women
are drowning their sorrows In drink.
Despite the extremely high cost of liv
ing, and even of drinking, arrests lor
drunkenness are averaging 200 a night.
About 75 per cent of the total arrests
In Vienna are for drunkenness. Or
these 88 per cent are of males, Five
per cent of the persons arrested ot
both sexes are minors.
We carry Cushion Covers
for Crates and Baskets in
stock.
Perry Warehouse Co.
We carry Cushion Covers
for Crates and Baskets in
stock.
Perry Warehouse Co.
FOR SALE:- Gum, Haj, CoasMa;
Meat, F tm. Lard, Sides and Shoal
den. Apply
A. A. Smoak, Perry, Ck
Tired
aching feet ?
MENTHOLATUM
.goothes.cools ancL
relieve
“Eat More Wheat” Will Be Slogan
Atlanta.—"Bat More Wheat” will be
the convention slogan of Southern
bakers of the baking association of
the South meeting In Atlanta. Dr. H.
E. Barnard, general manager of the.
Aiberican Association ot the Baking In
dustry, delivered a message to the bak
ers rfom Secretaries Hoover, Wallace
and Davis, with whom he recently con
ferred on the “Bat More Wheat’.’ plan. ‘
Harding Contributes To Legion Fund
Indianapolis, Ind.—President Hard
ing sent $50 to the American Legion
national headquarters as his, contri-
bution to the permanent endowment
fund being raised by the legion to pro
vide for the annlal deportation of
graves of 32,000 world war dead in Eu
rope each Memorial Day.
Fifteen Women Injured in Uprising
Dublin, Ireland.—Fifteen women and
two soldiers were injured In a battle
precipitated by an Insurgent uprising
In Amiens street. Explosives which
had been planted by rebels in the
Amiens street station caused most of
the casualties. When the Free State
troops rushed to the scene they were
met with a volley of rifle shots by the
Irregulars who had barlcaded them
selves on housetops. The shots and ex
plosion weTe heard all over the city
and hundreds rushed to the'scene of
the lighting. —1 i
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ISKillSlI PREMIER mourn
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Curzon Mentioned As Successor—Un
derstood King George Will Ask
For New Ministry
London.—Andrew Bon&r Law has
given up office. The resignation of
the Tory prime minister of Great Brit
ain, who has been suffdflng with se
rious threat trouble for/ some time,
was announced recently.
A statement Issued fro& i0 Downing
street quoted physicians as declaring
that there was no Bign of. an early
Improvement in Bonar Law’s liealtb
and that he, therefore, had presented
bis resignation to Kitig George, who
accepted it. *
Th_e premier returned from the con
tinent recently, after spending two
weeks away from London in a futile
attempt to recuperate his health, in
stead of going to io Downing street,
upon his return, he was rushed to a
private residence, where a Consultation
among Sly Thomas Horder and other
prominent specialists was held.
So ill is Bondr Law that his physi
cians are holding him incommunicado.
Even members of his cabinet were re
fused admission to his bedside.
It Is generally beiieved that the res
ignation marks the end . of Bonar
Law’B political career. He was forced
out of the Lloyd George coalition cab
inet because of JIT health He made
one more attempt to come back by ac
cepting the premiership nine months
ago, but hesitated then to assume the
great responsibilities confronting him
because of fear of the throat trouble
which has now overwhelmed him.
Bonar Law sent envoys, carrying
his resignation, to Adershot, where
King George is spending the week-end
This is a departure from the time-
honored custom of a retiring premier
going to Bush Ingham Palace to per
sonally place his portfolio at the dis
posal of his majeBty. The urgency
of quitting the post is seen in Bonar ,
Law’s break from the precedent.
The full text of the statement given
out at 10 Downing street follows:
“Mr. Bonar Laws’ voyage did nof
improve his health and on his return
to London he was examined by his
medical advisers Who signed the fol
lowing bulletin:
“ ’In spite of his rest, the prime min
ister's voice is still unsatisfactory. We
are unable to promise improvement
within a reasonable time. The state
of the prime minister’s general health
is not good.
" ‘signed—Gould May,. Thomas Hon
;der, Douglas Harmer.’
: “in consequence of this document,
Bonar Law Immediately placed his
resignation In the hands of his majes
ty, who was graciously pleased to ac<
cept It.”
; “The king has received the; Rjgbl
•Honorable Bonar Law’s communica
tion with the deepest regret and' has
graciously accepted bis resignation," .
the court circular Stated. : '
It is understood that King George
will summon Lord Curzon and Stanley
Baldwin, the chancellor oi the ex
chequer.
The ultra-die-hards In the conserva
tive party, who represent the aristoc
racy of the country, are behind Lord
Curzon while the more moderate lead
ers of the party are backing Baldwin.
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Baptists Score “Evolution” Theory
Kansas City, Mo.—A resolution con
demning the teaching,of evpiqtlon,reqd
to the Southern Baptist convention
here, created much excitement among
the delegates. . It ,was referred to a
committee on resolution^,. after a mo
tion to table had failed. The resolu
tion commended the trustees of Wil
liam JewOll college of Liberty, Mo., "for
putting to death in that institution this
order or system of teaching,” condemn
ed "such teaching and feels that its
adherents professing Christianity and,
At the same time, denying the source .
thereof, are highly Insane on the phan.
tom of higher education” and asked
that a commission be appointed to aild
in; "bringing about the death, of all such
teachings.”
Prepares To Send Ships To Russia
London.—Preparations are in-'prog
ress at Chatham and Portsmouth for
the immediate dispatch of light cruis
ers and ;mlne sweepers to Russian
waters, acebrding to the Daily Herald
(labor organ), which specifies four
cruisers and seven sweepers which
have thus been detailed for Russian.
northern waters. It also asserts there
have been significant movements oi
British war ships in the Mediterrane
an toward the Dardanelles, "possibly
en route to the Black sea.”
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Fight Results In Death Of Duelists
Amory. Miss.—Clifford Tyler, rail;
road brakeman, and J. Smith Willis,
engineer, are dead as a result - of a
pistol duel in park near the railroad
station here at night. The shooting is
said to have been the outgrowth of a
quarrel of long standing. Both were
mortaly wounded in the exchange ot
shots which occurred when WillfB
alighted from his engine and met 'Fylei
passing through the park. They both
worked for the same railroad, and.il
/was known by all their fellow-workers
Shat .trouble vfaa inevitable. .
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